I believe the most important thing to finding wildlife is to slow down. If practical get out of the vehicle and get away from the road. Stand still. Know different areas (forest, edge, field) and why wildlife uses them. Water, food, shelter etc. Morning is more targeted as animals wake up hungry and thirsty. The evening feed time is more spread out. Keep an open mind. You may be wanting to shoot elk in the river and notice a group of otters. Watch for movement, not size/shape/color.
The skill needed after noticing the target is to anticipate where it is going if it is on the move. Once a target is moving even slightly away from you the shot diminishes in quality very quickly. Animals moving purposefully will use trails to conserve energy, even in open territory they will often use the beaten path. Get a sixth sense for where the target is going and quickly circle to a point further along. When the light is not good use that time to work on your tracking skills.
Example below. I went over to a pond area in Katmai specifically looking for waterfowl. Not seeing any - and standing in ankle deep muck - I was thinking of relocating when I calmed myself and stood still for 10 minutes. At my 7 o'clock a wolf on the other side raised up. I waited another 30 minutes.
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Then it stretched, peed and started to move.
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I I surmised it would continue its' northern direction and I hurried/ran along parallel to come out ahead. Waiting for what I thought was appropriate for its speed it did not appear and I began to think it forked. So I took a couple of steps into the forest to see beyond the first line of foliage. Crappy shot - as almost were my pants - but it was coming out right where I thought.
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So I backed out slowly and got ready. Still hoping that was another yawn.
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The other point I wanted to make is to be generous to other shooters. While waiting another camper was heading to the falls and I communicated, mostly by gestures since he was Russian, to hang around I thought something good may happen. As deeds sometimes do it cost me a couple shots but the angle was slipping away as the wolf turned down the access road. Two thumbs up and some good Karma.
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